Srinagar: A top Saudi cleric on Friday described as “blessed” an Islamic summit in the capital Riyadh at the weekend to be attended by Muslim leaders and US President Donald Trump, ArabNews reported.

In his Friday sermon, the imam of the holy city of Makkah, Sheikh Saleh bin Hamid, praised the “blessed meeting that will bring together brothers and friends” on Sunday, the report said.

He urged participants “to show realism… and to stress the negative impact of interferences in regional affairs,” state news agency SPA reported him as saying.

He appeared to be referring to the mainly Sunni kingdom’s regional rival, Shiite-dominated Iran. The two countries have taken opposing sides in wars in Syria and Yemen.

The imam said interference in the Middle East has “exacerbated confessional, religious, nationalist and ethnic conflicts,” and called on summit participants to act to “stem armed chaos provoked by terrorists and their sponsors,” the report said.

Trump, who will make Saudi Arabia the first overseas stop of his presidency on Saturday, is expected to give a speech about Islam to 50 leaders of Muslim countries at the summit.

In his sermon, the imam urged those attending the summit to work toward “constructive dialogue, cooperation and tolerance,” the report said.

“The world must know the nation of Islam is proud of its religion, its identity, its values and its culture,” but also “believes in human and cultural diversity,” he was quoted as saying.

“Relations between states and nations must be based on equality and mutual respect.”